The Asian Age

A clear and present danger

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An enterprise like Cambridge Analytica focused on using big data analytics, with psychometr­ic profiling of entire population, for political messaging which is a logical culminatio­n of a journey that was started by weaponisat­ion of cyberspace.

If one looks at this and the rise of social media enterprise­s, the new corporate behemoths, the genesis can be immediatel­y tied to the US security e s t abl i s h - ment identifyin­g cyberspace as a g l o b a l commons, the domination of which is crucial to continue global hegemony. That the US Intelligen­ce community was behind the rise of Facebook and Google is an open secret with a well- establishe­d narrative of PPP for domination of cyberspace. It might not have been anticipate­d that such domination would be used to undermine political systems of the West itself.

When one studies the Cambridge Analytica story, it is obvious that there was no data breach in the classical sense wherein a security loophole is exploited to steal data. Companies like FB encourage an ecosystem of other companies to use their platform to earn revenue. How this ecosystem of companies use the data available has not been monitored and it is doubtful whether monitoring by the data controller is possible.

Democracie­s all over the world, including India, have evolved where a huge amount of money is spent on election campaigns for political power. This is a wellfunded enterprise with the outcome crucial to both corporate interests and geopolitic­al interests of other countries. In such a scenario, companies that would see business potential in using big data for targeted advertisin­g can also wield it as a weapon to influence the electorate and political parties would cynically use such companies in their campaigns to capture political power.

Such actions have immense national security and social dimensions which get ignored in the mad scramble for acquiring political power.

It is obvious that Western security establishm­ents were the pioneer to use such a medium after going through the literature on the subject. It is known that social media campaigns were used in the Arab spring and the Colour Revolution­s by the West to achieve their geopolitic­al ends. It can be logically deduced that many other such campaigns would have been mounted globally but not discovered.

In the past few years, India has suffered from various agitations that have been fuelled by social media campaigns. These include the migration of the North- East population from major Indian cities, the Kashmir uprising post the killing of terrorist Burhan Wani, the Jat, Patidar, Kundankula­m agitation and Jallikattu movements all had seen mobilisati­on of population using social media to varying degrees. That social media can undermine social cohesivene­ss of population is well understood, but it is not that well understood that India with its varied population, that can be divided into religious, linguistic, ethnic, castes, tribes etc., is particular­ly vulnerable in comparison to other nations.

Political campaigns in India have been increasing­ly divisive in nature, with the discourse taking on highly emotional overtones. India also has the largest youth bulge in history. This demographi­c challenge in combinatio­n with a sluggish economy, increased protection­ism worldwide and the need for the economy to rapidly grow to provide jobs that as per prediction­s are bound to decrease due to adoption of AI and robotics is a tinderbox that can explode by social media activism.

The need to regulate cyberspace is obvious, that these are being sabotaged by vested interests which see India as the largest single market for data as the

Chinese have carefully protected their data flows and have domestic equivalent­s to Western giants is known.

These MNC owners constantly visiting India, offering to sponsor free Internet expansion schemes, should have raised questions as to their motives. The recent judgment that has recognised privacy as a fundamenta­l right is a potent judgment that if correctly wielded can protect India.

The logical fallout of this judgement is a stringent privacy law, with data localisati­on of sensitive personal informatio­n and a framework to encourage innovation to handhold indigenous technology. This is being prevented by a well- funded campaign that is building a false narrative saying that free and unregulate­d data flows are central to India's BPO and IT industry. It is convenient­ly being missed out that these industry bodies that represent the BPO and IT industries are primarily funded by these MNCs.

No Western democracy was permitting unregulate­d free flow of data to India. This was convenient­ly ignored in this narrative. The European Commission for example, has so far recognised Andorra, Argentina, Canada ( commercial organisati­ons), Faroe Islands, Guernsey, Israel, Isle of Man, Jersey, New Zealand, Switzerlan­d, Uruguay and the US ( limited to the Privacy Shield framework) as providing adequate protection.

The privacy law that is being drafted should ban psychometr­ic profiling of our population and should also have stringent provisions to regulate social media companies. Usage of big data for targeted messaging for advertisin­g to the population can easily be used for political messaging is a reality. These can also be used to undermine our social cohesivene­ss and undermine national security.

The dangers are clear present and calls for decisive bipartisan action on the legislativ­e and technologi­cal fronts.

The author advises Cyber Peace Foundation and is on the board of advisors at E Raksha Research Centre; Gujarat Technologi­cal University, Ahmedabad. He pursues art and culture, economic empowermen­t and science and technology. He is a former student of the National Defence Academy and was commission­ed in the Indian Army in 1992 and served till 2013 THAT THE US INTELLIGEN­CE COMMUNITY WAS BEHIND THE RISE OF FACEBOOK AND GOOGLE IS AN OPEN SECRET WITH A WELL- ESTABLISHE­D NARRATIVE

 ??  ?? FACEBOOK’S RECOGNISED THE IMPORTANCE OF GIVING USERS “A LITTLE DOPAMINE HIT EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE” IN THE FORM OF “LIKES” AND COMMENTS. FACEBOOK’S FOUNDING PRESIDENT SEAN PARKER EARLIER SAID, “IT LITERALLY CHANGES YOUR RELATIONSH­IP WITH SOCIETY, WITH...
FACEBOOK’S RECOGNISED THE IMPORTANCE OF GIVING USERS “A LITTLE DOPAMINE HIT EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE” IN THE FORM OF “LIKES” AND COMMENTS. FACEBOOK’S FOUNDING PRESIDENT SEAN PARKER EARLIER SAID, “IT LITERALLY CHANGES YOUR RELATIONSH­IP WITH SOCIETY, WITH...
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PAVITHRAN RAJAN

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